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Set up a GlusterFS Server

As an open-source distributed file system, GlusterFS allows you to mount glusterfs volumes to your Pods. If a glusterfs volume is pre-populated with data, they can be shared among your Pods in a Kubernetes cluster.

This tutorial demonstrates how to configure GlusterFS on three server machines and install Heketi to manage your GlusterFS cluster.

Once you have GlusterFS and Heketi set up, you can install GlusterFS on your client machine and use KubeKey to create a KubeSphere cluster with GlusterFS as a storage class.

Prepare GlusterFS Nodes

There are three server machines of Ubuntu 16.04 in this example with each having one attached disk.

Hostname IP Address Operating System Device
server1 192.168.0.2 Ubuntu 16.04, 4 Cores, 4 GB of Memory /dev/vdd 300 GB
server2 192.168.0.3 Ubuntu 16.04, 4 Cores, 4 GB of Memory /dev/vdd 300 GB
server3 192.168.0.4 Ubuntu 16.04, 4 Cores, 4 GB of Memory /dev/vdd 300 GB

Note

  • Heketi will be installed on server1, which provides a RESTful management interface to manage the lifecycle of GlusterFS volumes. You can install it on a separate machine as well.

  • Attach more block storage disks to your server machine if you need more storage space.

  • Data will be saved to /dev/vdd (block device), which must be original without partitioning or formatting.

Set up Passwordless SSH Login

Configure root login

  1. Log in to server1 and switch to the root user.

    sudo -i
    
  2. Change the root user password:

    passwd
    

    Note

    Make sure password authentication is enabled in the file /etc/ssh/sshd_config (the value of PasswordAuthentication should be yes).
  3. Change the root user password of server2 and server3 as well.

Add hosts file entries

  1. Configure your DNS or edit the /etc/hosts file on all server machines to add their hostnames and IP addresses:

    vi /etc/hosts
    
    # hostname loopback address
    192.168.0.2  server1
    192.168.0.3  server2
    192.168.0.4  server3
    
  2. Make sure you add the above entries to the hosts file of all server machines.

Configure passwordless SSH login

  1. On server1, create a key by running the following command. Press Enter directly for all the prompts.

    ssh-keygen
    
  2. Copy the key to all GlusterFS nodes.

    ssh-copy-id root@server1
    
    ssh-copy-id root@server2
    
    ssh-copy-id root@server3
    
  3. Verify that you can access all server machines from server1 through passwordless login.

    ssh root@server1
    
    ssh root@server2
    
    ssh root@server3
    

Install GlusterFS on All Server Machines

  1. On server1, run the following command to install software-properties-common.

    apt-get install software-properties-common
    
  2. Add the community GlusterFS PPA.

    add-apt-repository ppa:gluster/glusterfs-7
    
  3. Make sure you are using the latest package.

    apt-get update
    
  4. Install the GlusterFS server.

    apt-get install glusterfs-server -y
    
  5. Make sure you run the above commands on server2 and server3 as well and verify the version on all machines.

    glusterfs -V
    

Note

The above commands may be slightly different if you do no install GlusterFS on Ubuntu. For more information, see the Gluster documentation.

Load Kernel Modules

  1. Run the following commands to load three necessary kernel modules on server1.

    echo dm_thin_pool | sudo tee -a /etc/modules
    
    echo dm_snapshot | sudo tee -a /etc/modules
    
    echo dm_mirror | sudo tee -a /etc/modules
    
  2. Intall thin-provisioning-tools.

    apt-get -y install thin-provisioning-tools
    
  3. Make sure you run the above commands on server2 and server3 as well.

Create a GlusterFS Cluster

  1. Run the following command on server1 to add other nodes and create a cluster.

    gluster peer probe server2
    
    gluster peer probe server3
    
  2. Verify that all nodes in the cluster are connected successfully.

    gluster peer status
    
  3. Expected output:

    Number of Peers: 2
    
    Hostname: server2
    Uuid: e1192d6a-b65e-4ce8-804c-72d9425211a6
    State: Peer in Cluster (Connected)
    
    Hostname: server3
    Uuid: 9bd733e4-96d4-49d5-8958-6c947a2b4fa6
    State: Peer in Cluster (Connected)
    

Install Heketi

As GlusterFS itself does not provide a way for API calls, you can install Heketi to manage the lifecycle of GlusterFS volumes with a RESTful API for Kubernetes calls. In this way, your Kubernetes cluster can dynamically provision GlusterFS volumes. Heketi v7.0.0 will be installed in this example. For more information about available Heketi versions, see its Release Page.

  1. Download Heketi on server1.

    wget https://github.com/heketi/heketi/releases/download/v7.0.0/heketi-v7.0.0.linux.amd64.tar.gz
    

    Note

    You can also install Heketi on a separate machine.
  2. Unzip the file.

    tar -xf heketi-v7.0.0.linux.amd64.tar.gz
    
    cd heketi
    
    cp heketi /usr/bin
    
    cp heketi-cli /usr/bin
    
  3. Create a Heketi service file.

    vi /lib/systemd/system/heketi.service
    
    [Unit]
    Description=Heketi Server
    [Service]
    Type=simple
    WorkingDirectory=/var/lib/heketi
    ExecStart=/usr/bin/heketi --config=/etc/heketi/heketi.json
    Restart=on-failure
    StandardOutput=syslog
    StandardError=syslog
    [Install]
    WantedBy=multi-user.target
    
  4. Create Heketi folders.

    mkdir -p /var/lib/heketi
    
    mkdir -p /etc/heketi
    
  5. Create a JSON file for Heketi configurations.

    vi /etc/heketi/heketi.json
    

    An example file:

    {
      "_port_comment": "Heketi Server Port Number",
      "port": "8080",
    
      "_use_auth": "Enable JWT authorization. Please enable for deployment",
      "use_auth": false,
    
      "_jwt": "Private keys for access",
      "jwt": {
        "_admin": "Admin has access to all APIs",
        "admin": {
          "key": "123456"
        },
        "_user": "User only has access to /volumes endpoint",
        "user": {
          "key": "123456"
        }
      },
    
      "_glusterfs_comment": "GlusterFS Configuration",
      "glusterfs": {
        "_executor_comment": [
          "Execute plugin. Possible choices: mock, ssh",
          "mock: This setting is used for testing and development.",
          "      It will not send commands to any node.",
          "ssh:  This setting will notify Heketi to ssh to the nodes.",
          "      It will need the values in sshexec to be configured.",
          "kubernetes: Communicate with GlusterFS containers over",
          "            Kubernetes exec api."
        ],
        "executor": "ssh",
    
        "_sshexec_comment": "SSH username and private key file information",
        "sshexec": {
          "keyfile": "/root/.ssh/id_rsa",
          "user": "root"
        },
    
        "_kubeexec_comment": "Kubernetes configuration",
        "kubeexec": {
          "host" :"https://kubernetes.host:8443",
          "cert" : "/path/to/crt.file",
          "insecure": false,
          "user": "kubernetes username",
          "password": "password for kubernetes user",
          "namespace": "Kubernetes namespace",
          "fstab": "Optional: Specify fstab file on node.  Default is /etc/fstab"
        },
    
        "_db_comment": "Database file name",
        "db": "/var/lib/heketi/heketi.db",
        "brick_max_size_gb" : 1024,
    	"brick_min_size_gb" : 1,
    	"max_bricks_per_volume" : 33,
    
    
        "_loglevel_comment": [
          "Set log level. Choices are:",
          "  none, critical, error, warning, info, debug",
          "Default is warning"
        ],
        "loglevel" : "debug"
      }
    }
    

    Note

    The account admin and its key value must be provided when you install GlusterFS as a storage class of your KubeSphere cluster.
  6. Start Heketi.

    systemctl start heketi
    
  7. Check the status of Heketi.

    systemctl status heketi
    

    If you can see active (running), it means the installation is successful. Expected output:

    โ— heketi.service - Heketi Server
       Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/heketi.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled)
       Active: active (running) since Tue 2021-03-09 13:04:30 CST; 4s ago
     Main PID: 9282 (heketi)
        Tasks: 8
       Memory: 6.5M
          CPU: 62ms
       CGroup: /system.slice/heketi.service
               โ””โ”€9282 /usr/bin/heketi --config=/etc/heketi/heketi.json
    
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 systemd[1]: Started Heketi Server.
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: Heketi v7.0.0
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 Loaded ssh executor
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 Adv: Max bricks per volume set to 33
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 Adv: Max brick size 1024 GB
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 Adv: Min brick size 1 GB
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 GlusterFS Application Loaded
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: [heketi] INFO 2021/03/09 13:04:30 Started Node Health Cache Monitor
    Mar 09 13:04:30 server1 heketi[9282]: Listening on port 8080
    
  8. Enable Heketi.

    systemctl enable heketi
    

    Expected output:

    Created symlink from /etc/systemd/system/multi-user.target.wants/heketi.service to /lib/systemd/system/heketi.service.
    
  9. Create a topology configuration file for Heketi. It contains the information of clusters, nodes, and disks added to Heketi.

    vi /etc/heketi/topology.json
    

    An example file:

       {
        "clusters": [
           {
             "nodes": [
               {
                 "node": {
                   "hostnames": {
                     "manage": [
                       "192.168.0.2" 
                    ],
                    "storage": [
                      "192.168.0.2" 
                    ]
                  },
                  "zone": 1
                },
                "devices": [
                  "/dev/vdd" 
                ]
              },
              {
                "node": {
                  "hostnames": {
                    "manage": [
                      "192.168.0.3" 
                    ],
                    "storage": [
                      "192.168.0.3"
                    ]
                  },
                  "zone": 1
                },
                "devices": [
                  "/dev/vdd" 
                ]
              },
              {
                 "node": {
                   "hostnames": {
                     "manage": [
                       "192.168.0.4"
                    ],
                    "storage": [
                      "192.168.0.4"  
                    ]
                  },
                  "zone": 1
                },
                "devices": [
                  "/dev/vdd"
                ]
              }
            ]
          }
        ]
      }
    

    Note

    • Replace the IP addresses above with your own.
    • Add your own disk name for devices.
  10. Load the Heketi JSON file.

    export HEKETI_CLI_SERVER=http://localhost:8080
    
    heketi-cli topology load --json=/etc/heketi/topology.json
    

    Expected output:

    Creating cluster ... ID: 2d9e11adede04fe6d07cb81c5a1a7ea4
    	Allowing file volumes on cluster.
    	Allowing block volumes on cluster.
    	Creating node 192.168.0.2 ... ID: 0a9f240ab6fd96ea014948c5605be675
    		Adding device /dev/vdd ... OK
    	Creating node 192.168.0.3 ... ID: 2468086cadfee8ef9f48bc15db81c88a
    		Adding device /dev/vdd ... OK
    	Creating node 192.168.0.4 ... ID: 4c21b33d5c32029f5b7dc6406977ec34
    		Adding device /dev/vdd ... OK
    
  11. The above output displays both your cluster ID and node ID. Run the following command to view your cluster information.

    heketi-cli cluster info 2d9e11adede04fe6d07cb81c5a1a7ea4 # Use your own cluster ID.
    

    Expected output:

    Cluster id: 2d9e11adede04fe6d07cb81c5a1a7ea4
    Nodes:
    0a9f240ab6fd96ea014948c5605be675
    2468086cadfee8ef9f48bc15db81c88a
    4c21b33d5c32029f5b7dc6406977ec34
    Volumes:
    
    Block: true
    
    File: true
    

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